Black Dahlia Avenger Rev Ed

624 pages

English language

Published July 25, 2006

ISBN:
978-0-06-113961-1
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Goodreads:
21706

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(3 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'Black Dahlia Avenger Rev Ed' on 'Goodreads'

This was an interesting book, and while I suspect Hodel’s conclusion is correct (especially with the LAPD documentation included with the revised editions), there seem to be many leaps in logic throughout. There are a lot of instances where Hodel presents something interesting and strongly suggestive, but then immediately follow it up with breathless textual victory laps as if a smoking gun has been discovered.

Review of 'Black Dahlia Avenger Rev Ed' on 'Goodreads'

What I should first point out is that this book does not—as Steve Hodel claims—prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that his father, George Hill Hodel, was the Black Dahlia Killer or the Red Lipstick killer. I will say that his theories and the conjecture that he bases them upon are somewhat fascinating. Were this book a fictionalized account like Ellroy’s ‘The Black Dahlia,’ I think I may have loved it. From what evidence Hodel can present, his father certainly seems like he was capable of such terrible crimes as the brutal murder of Elizabeth Anne Short, but there is no real evidence, circumstantial or otherwise, to prove it. I may be a fool for not trusting the gut feelings of a twenty-plus year veteran of the LAPD, especially one with an impressive rate of case closures, but supposition is just not the same as evidence.

In the later …

Review of 'Black Dahlia Avenger Rev Ed' on 'Goodreads'

L’enquête de Steve Hodel est plus que convaincante. Tout au long de ce pavé de presque 800 pages il nous décortique un fait divers jamais élucidé, et nous révèle la face cachée de la police du Los Angeles des années 40. Corruption, crimes, scandales sexuels, tout y est. Avec une froide objectivité Hodel nous dresse le portrait de son père, impressionnant et génial, et celui de l’assassin du Dahlia, pervers et joueur, et à coup de preuves et de nombreuses pièces à conviction nous démontre les rouages d’une enquête étrangement menée, restée irrésolue pendant plus de 50 ans. Si parfois le foisonnement d’éléments peut paraitre rébarbatif et long, ce n’est que pour mieux éclairer le lecteur.
À lire après Le Dahlia noir de James Ellroy.